Torchlight Curriculum is a newer secular curriculum option for homeschoolers.

Having used the torchlight curriculum for a few months now, I wanted to share a review of what I like and what aspects we’ve been changing.

How we’re using the Level 1 & K Torchlight Curriculum

I love the selection of books. However, some of them for ‘level 1’ can be a little too heavy for grade 1. I’m currently combining level K and level 1 for our grade 1 and grade 3 kids. There are some things I’m really enjoying about it, and others that I’m tweaking (more on that below). I’ve purchased the level k-2 for torchlight, and since they’ve also added a pre-k which I plan to add for our preschooler in the fall. Although the plan this year was to do level 1, the kids loved the Zoey and Sassafras series so much, and I hadn’t done a ‘global intro’ to their education, so I’m pulling from both levels.

Pros and Cons of the Torchlight Curriculum

In general, I really enjoy this curriculum but there are some inconsistencies with how much reading you do in a week. Some weeks are lighter than others. As an example, under the myth section, one week you might only read a few pages of one book, the next week you read 20 pages a day in addition to the literature and science books. For grade 1, there’s no way I can read 20 pages in one sitting for the attention span.

Keep in mind that every kid is different for how long they can sit for read alouds.

One of the things I loved when reading ‘the Read Aloud Family’ were the suggestions of how to keep the kids busy while you’re reading. Other than picture books, where the pictures are the engaging part, some read alouds need some hands on activities like coloring, handwork etc.

Although I’m using this level for two grades, I am personally saving certain books for other years.

Pantomime Poetry

I love adding poetry to our homeschooling, and prior to using torchlight, we love doing a weekly poetry and tea timebrave writer style.

However for torchlight they use the Pantomine poetry, meaning you use ‘ cross-body movement while reciting a poem’ to better retain it. This didn’t sit well for it, the kids sort of enjoyed it once or twice, but they really weren’t into it, neither was I. So we scratched this aspect of the curriculum, yet still enjoy weekly poetry.

Some of the Level K Torchlight Curriculum books

Affordability vs Many Many Books

The price of the curriculum is very affordable. Your purchase will be a pdf file, however I had mine printed locally. I have level K and 2 so far not printed, time will tell what I do with that.

So that being said, the price itself is very affordable, but the curriculum offers an expansive list of books to purchase. I read that it’s around 100 books in a year, which is a lot. However, as a literature based program, lots of books are also expected.

Some of the Level 1 book selection

Because the titles are modern and new, many are hard, if not impossible, to find at your local library. The rest need to be purchased. Some I couldn’t get a hold of for months. I really wanted to include the ‘Cultured Chef’ suggested in level K for fun stories and global cooking. However, it was out of print for awhile and I’m still awaiting my copy. There’s a list of certain books like ‘Tua and the Elephant’ or ‘The Book of Goddesses’ that I’m trying to get.

Literature Primers

I really enjoy the literature primers that torchlight offers. She gives you an insight of certain topics that may be sensitive for certain readers, or that may prob some deeper questions. Then she goes into questions that you could discuss in relation to what you’re reading. Level 1 offers 18 literature primers.

Vocabulary Spellbooks

I love the idea for the vocabulary spellbooks, but I’m only just starting to use them now with our grade 3. For our grade 1, it’s well above her head to understand this aspect of language arts. I do like the look of the pages and do think they’ll work in the future.

Art & Music

I really like that Torchlight includes art and music into their curriculum. Our girls really love the clay lab for kids, and I really enjoy the Barefoot Book of Stories from the Opera. As a person who has zero music background or comprehension of classical music, I like that they’ve added it in. There’s not really much art except the clay, but I’m ok with that as we’re always doing art here.

Final Thoughts

In general, I really love this secular homeschool curriculum. I’m personally ok doing tweaking here and there as needed. Torchlight also has a facebook group where you can discuss many questions with others using it. We’re currently not following it exactly and combining levels based on what I want to read to them and how their interests are flowing.

They suggest doing Right Start Math, which I’ve read amazing reviews on but it’s VERY parent intensive and time consuming. I have a 1.5 year old and a 3 year old so we’re using a mix of other math curriculum. (I’ll review math curriculum in another post. We’re experimenting with Math Lessons for a Living Education, Singapore and Mathematical reasoning for Grade 1 and added Beast Academy for grade 3). We’re also not using the suggested Logic of English. We use Spelling you See which we love, Explode the Code, and added copywork (often Brave Writer from a book we’re reading) for my grade 3. I’ve also got some additional Kumon reading and writing books to use on the side.

Have you used Torchlight?

How are you liking it so far?

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